i love that boy. it s not fair thought he was taken from his children or from his family. jessie fell for vince, a man in uniform holding the fort during his long deployments. my hat goes off to all military wives. it s not easy. it s not. she was a good mom. she loved the kids. reunited at last, they celebrated. then, on the drive home there was a car there, stranded. vince tells his wife that he s going to go check on him. i heard two three popping sounds. he was laying there with atppeared to be several gunshot wounds to the head. her husband and father of five, dead. i want my mommy. and i want my kids. no one could understand it. the type of person that he was, i don t think he ever had an enemy. or did he? he said, we are now in debt to bad people. we knew that there was another person that needed to be looked at. a winding investigation leading deep into the dark. this sounds like a love triangle? i believe it was. it s horrific.
accountable for overturning the election. we will tell you, all of these stories and more after a quick break. do not go anywhere. to anywhere. to ne. act now and get iphone 14 pro on us when you switch.
that ultimately was matched to the shell casings found at our murder scene. and they swabbed the truck which eventually led to evidence that indicated a gunshot residue in several places around his vehicle. can i ask you to take that seat over there. yes, sir. colorado police brought jarred in for questioning. unlike jessie, he didn t hesitate to talk about his romantic relationship with her. we hooked up a while back. it was sometime around september. and we started going out, and the next thing i knew it we were living together. i knew she was married. i knew it was horrible, but he also admitted to being in kentucky on the day of the murder, but he says he left before dark. when do you think you left? about 5:30. what he didn t know was that jessie had already pointed the finger at him. she has spoken wit them a she p to beyo did you ever find any evi tha who had n unexp into a t setbaccoming up essie gos ow oolice. when sold the story to veral ncluding he
passage out of afghanistan beyond the end of august. we can now speak to karin von hippel, who s the director general at the think tank, the royal united services institute, or rusi. hello, thank you for being with us. it seems joe hello, thank you for being with us. it seemsjoe biden has decided he s pulling his troops out 31 august. does that make sense to you? i think he s feeling does that make sense to you? i think he s feeling under does that make sense to you? i think he s feeling under a does that make sense to you? i think he s feeling under a lot does that make sense to you? i think he s feeling under a lot of does that make sense to you? i think he s feeling under a lot of pressure i he s feeling under a lot of pressure because the taliban also agreed to that deadline. arbitrary as it might sound, they are worried about security for their troops and for others beyond the deadline. it doesn t mean they won t try to negotiate in the background, try to stay longer or
here in america. but first, here s my take. the news today is buried in to ne tunisia. it came in arab spring, after the prime minister had been assassinated. it got he mithinking about one the fundamental rules in politics. the best recent work on this subject comes from a remarkable pair of scholars, darren nosinglu and eric carter. history is littered with places where gangs, warlords and tribes rule and the state is never able to effectively have power and govern. that was afghanistan s past. it might be its future.